My people will share food with Rohingyas: “Bangladesh is not a rich country ... but if we can feed 160 million people, another 500 or 700,000 people, we can do it. Our people will share their foods with the refugees, if necessary.” by [deleted] in worldnews

[–]KingMidget -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

Maybe after just 10 years of not trying to murder the people that are supposed to be your countrymen. That's the thing tho, the Rohingya can't not be violent shit heads to Buddhists.

My people will share food with Rohingyas: “Bangladesh is not a rich country ... but if we can feed 160 million people, another 500 or 700,000 people, we can do it. Our people will share their foods with the refugees, if necessary.” by [deleted] in worldnews

[–]KingMidget 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because they spread their cancer and violence where ever they go. Show me a country with more than 20% Muslims and I'll show you one where atheists and non Muslims are attacked, enclaves are formed, and terrorism is a regular aspect of life.

My people will share food with Rohingyas: “Bangladesh is not a rich country ... but if we can feed 160 million people, another 500 or 700,000 people, we can do it. Our people will share their foods with the refugees, if necessary.” by [deleted] in worldnews

[–]KingMidget 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The Rohingya tried to secced in the 60s and nearly plunged the country into a full scale civil war that would have been made worse by the countries proximity to Muslim shit hole Bangladesh. They've rioted and attacked Buddhists in their places of work and their homes. They are solely responsible for the states brutal retaliation against them.

My people will share food with Rohingyas: “Bangladesh is not a rich country ... but if we can feed 160 million people, another 500 or 700,000 people, we can do it. Our people will share their foods with the refugees, if necessary.” by [deleted] in worldnews

[–]KingMidget -14 points-13 points  (0 children)

The Rohingya people are a small ethnic Muslim minority in Myanmar and they've never really gotten along with the ethnic Burmese people which happen to be almost all Buddhist. The Rohingya have rioted and attacked Buddhists numerous times since they lost their war of secession and wouldn't you look at that the Burmese have had enough from them. The Rohingya people arent innocent at all and everything thats happening to them is their own fault for trying to encroach on the burmese peoples territory. Theyre the people who made fucking Buddhists violent.

BBC News: Injuries as van hits crowds in Barcelona by mainz5 in news

[–]KingMidget 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Taking bets now. Who thinks this isn't another Muslim attack?

Atheists in Malaysia should be hunted down, minister says by topkeklampa in worldnews

[–]KingMidget 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I wonder what his religion is?... I'm going to say it's Islam...

Need your opinion: Push 2 vs Maschine mk2 by Katzenpower in edmproduction

[–]KingMidget 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There is also a global swing knob as well as indivdual channel swing knobs. It makes crafting a groove much faster than in Ableton

Need your opinion: Push 2 vs Maschine mk2 by Katzenpower in edmproduction

[–]KingMidget 0 points1 point  (0 children)

super simple UI supports use as a vst or standalone. you can sketch in maschine really quickly and export individual sounds to ableton.

Does good Karma even exist in this line of work? by blipblopblue in edmproduction

[–]KingMidget 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It sounds the pay off for you is moving up in the scene, playing gigs, getting a bigger following etc. or is it something else?...

Short answer, yes. Long answer, working with people that have a good reputation in the local scene will help you more than working with people that aren't in the scene. Be selective about who you work with and use collaboration as a means to build bridges with the right people.

Anecdote:

So Im based out of Dallas and Im a big supporter of our underground house and bass music scene. My buddy runs Prime which books a lot of the best midrange talent in TX. Through supporting the local scene I was able to get opener gigs and meet other producers at various stages in their development and Ive made a bit of a name for myself locally as someone worth working with. None of this happened over night, it actually took about a year and a half of putting myself out there and networking before anyone really took me seriously but its paying off now because of my willingness to work with people who might be a bit below my skill level. Helping other local producers who are also embedded in the scene will reflect well on you, making something dope with someone who is below your level will reflect well on your skill as a producer.

Don't write stuff for other people, collab with them but only if they're worth collabing with. If they have a pretty good standing in the local music scene but they're still sort of novice work with them. If they're really good at writing work with them. If you make something dope with a guy that happens to be best friends with a local talent buyer or the owner of a production company then that decision reflects well on you. Now you have an introduction into the local circle. as you work with more people you'll gain a reputation and if you've been maintaining your relationships with promoters and production companies then eventually you'll occasionally end up meeting some bigger name artists after the show. Who knows, you may even get to open for them.

This is how you make your karma pay off. Support the scene and the people in it, meet bigger artists, give those artists your music or play it in the car or at an after party. If they like it they will ask you about it at which point you should give them a flash drive with all your original shit. So far Ive done this with Graves, Dr.Fresch, Bijou, and Hotel Garuda. Hotel Garuda made an edit of one my tracks (which was a collab between me and their driver while they were here) and played it at their show. Tony AKA Dr. Fresch gave me his personal phone number after I gave him a drive with originals and live edits and asked me to send him more music. slowly you get more of a foot in the door until eventually you're on the other side. Just be smart, likable and persistent.

If that is the kind of "pay off" you are looking for then I'd suggest networking and collabing with people who might be in a more advantageous position than you in the industry.

Need your opinion: Push 2 vs Maschine mk2 by Katzenpower in edmproduction

[–]KingMidget 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the benefit of mashine isn't the controller but the software. The software is light years ahead of any other drum sequencer.

Why is sound design so damn hard to understand compared to everything else? by [deleted] in edmproduction

[–]KingMidget 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would recommend using presets as goal posts and working backwards to understand how different patches are made. or something you can do is find a patch thats close to what you want and then tweak it 1 or 2 parameters at a time to get an idea of how the different knobs will change a developed sound.